» Articles » PMID: 31149367

Burden and Characteristics of Unsolicited Emails from Medical/Scientific Journals, Conferences, and Webinars to Faculty and Trainees at an Academic Pathology Department

Overview
Journal J Pathol Inform
Date 2019 Jun 1
PMID 31149367
Citations 3
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: Professionals and trainees in the medical and scientific fields may receive high e-mail volumes for conferences and journals. In this report, we analyze the amount and characteristics of unsolicited e-mails for journals, conferences, and webinars received by faculty and trainees in a pathology department at an academic medical center.

Methods: With informed consent, we analyzed 7 consecutive days of e-mails from faculty and trainees who voluntarily participated in the study and saved unsolicited e-mails from their institutional e-mail address (including junk e-mail folder) for medical/scientific journals, conferences, and webinars. All e-mails were examined for characteristics such as reply receipts, domain name, and spam likelihood. Journal e-mails were specifically analyzed for claims in the message body (for example, peer review, indexing in databases/resources, rapid publication) and actual inclusion in recognized journal databases/resources.

Results: A total of 17 faculty (4 assistant, 4 associate, and 9 full professors) and 9 trainees (5 medical students, 2 pathology residents, and 2 pathology fellows) completed the study. A total of 755 e-mails met study criteria (417 e-mails from 328 unique journals, 244 for conferences, and 94 for webinars). Overall, 44.4% of e-mails were flagged as potential spam by the institutional default settings, and 13.8% requested reply receipts. The highest burden of e-mails in 7 days was by associate and full professors (maximum 158 or approximately 8200 per year), although some trainees and assistant professors had over 30 e-mails in 7 days (approximately 1560 per year). Common characteristics of journal e-mails were mention of "peer review" in the message body and low rates of inclusion in recognized journal databases/resources, with 76.4% not found in any of 9 journal databases/resources. The location for conferences in e-mails included 31 different countries, with the most common being the United States (33.2%), Italy (9.8%), China (4.9%), United Kingdom (4.9%), and Canada (4.5%).

Conclusions: The present study in an academic pathology department shows a high burden of unsolicited e-mails for medical/scientific journals, conferences, and webinars, especially to associate and full professors. We also demonstrate that some pathology trainees and junior faculty are receiving an estimated 1500 unsolicited e-mails per year.

Citing Articles

Predatory conferences: a systematic scoping review.

Godskesen T, Eriksson S, Oermann M, Gabrielsson S BMJ Open. 2022; 12(11):e062425.

PMID: 36450423 PMC: 9716922. DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-062425.


Beware of Predatory Conferences: A Pandemic through Another Pandemic.

Kumar Agrawal A, Das S Indian J Psychol Med. 2021; 43(4):365-366.

PMID: 34385735 PMC: 8327878. DOI: 10.1177/02537176211023280.


Academic E-Mail Overload and the Burden of "Academic Spam".

Wood K, Krasowski M Acad Pathol. 2020; 7:2374289519898858.

PMID: 32010761 PMC: 6974753. DOI: 10.1177/2374289519898858.

References
1.
Bartholomew R . Science for sale: the rise of predatory journals. J R Soc Med. 2014; 107(10):384-5. PMC: 4206639. DOI: 10.1177/0141076814548526. View

2.
Manca A, Moher D, Cugusi L, Dvir Z, Deriu F . How predatory journals leak into PubMed. CMAJ. 2018; 190(35):E1042-E1045. PMC: 6148641. DOI: 10.1503/cmaj.180154. View

3.
Hawkes N . Spoof research paper is accepted by 157 journals. BMJ. 2013; 347:f5975. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.f5975. View

4.
Cobey K, Lalu M, Skidmore B, Ahmadzai N, Grudniewicz A, Moher D . What is a predatory journal? A scoping review. F1000Res. 2018; 7:1001. PMC: 6092896. DOI: 10.12688/f1000research.15256.1. View

5.
Strielkowski W . Predatory journals: Beall's List is missed. Nature. 2017; 544(7651):416. DOI: 10.1038/544416b. View